ChatGPT adds Scheduled hub, brings tasks under control

ChatGPT Scheduled – OpenAI is rolling out a new Scheduled page inside ChatGPT’s sidebar that lets users view active scheduled tasks, see when they’ll run, and pause, edit, or delete upcoming requests. The update also improves how ChatGPT handles scheduled prompts and expands the
The first time you ask ChatGPT to do something “later,” you’re supposed to trust that it will remember. But until now, there hasn’t been an obvious place to check whether those future requests are actually set—and to control them once they’re running.
That’s changing. When you open ChatGPT’s sidebar next time, you’ll see a new shortcut to a Scheduled page. It’s built as a command center for any active tasks you’ve assigned to the chatbot, including when they’re set to run. From the same page, you can pause, edit, and delete any upcoming requests.
OpenAI also says the underlying scheduling is getting a boost. Scheduled prompts will be “faster and more reliable,” the company states. And when you ask ChatGPT to handle something in the future, you can choose a specific time or give a broader window like morning, afternoon, or evening.
The rollout isn’t limited to a single tier, either. OpenAI says the Scheduled tasks experience is coming to Go, Plus, Pro, Business, and Enterprise users on both web and mobile. No timeline has been given for when—or whether—the Free tier will receive access.
There’s another capability tucked into the update that makes the new hub feel more consequential than a simple reminder tool. OpenAI’s own video shows that users can set up monitoring tasks—work where ChatGPT will proactively search the web or check connected apps on a user’s behalf.
Taken together, the Scheduled page turns something that used to be easy to assume into something you can actually manage. Instead of hoping a future request stays on track, you get a place to review what’s active and intervene if it’s not.
The update also reshapes daily interaction inside ChatGPT by sunsetting Pulse. OpenAI introduced Pulse as personalized daily summaries last year, and now it’s being phased out. Pro users can keep using Pulse for the next 14 days. After that point, OpenAI directs users to the new scheduling hub to generate future summaries.
For many people. that change lands in a practical spot: the habit of checking daily updates may shift from an automatic summary flow to one you explicitly schedule. In other words. the same “what happens next” question that comes with future tasks now follows the daily routine as well—except this time. there’s a page for it.
ChatGPT scheduled tasks Scheduled page OpenAI update monitoring tasks Pulse daily summaries Plus Pro Business Enterprise web and mobile pause edit delete
So now it can just… remember stuff later? Great, until it remembers the wrong thing.
I don’t trust this. “Proactive search the web” sounds like it’s gonna start checking everything I didn’t ask for. Like first it’s tasks, then it’s mind-reading.
Wait Pulse is getting sunset?? So they’re taking away my daily summaries and replacing them with… scheduling? I thought Pulse already was like scheduled. Does that mean I have to click more now or it won’t update?
This is cool but also why am I controlling a chatbot like it’s a dishwasher timer lol. I saw something about “faster and more reliable” and I’m like okay, reliable at doing what exactly? Also does Free get it or no timeline like they forgot?